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CLEAR, the Campaign for Lead Free Air, was started in 1981 when a wealthy property developer, Godfrey Bradman, recruited the veteran campaigner and former Director of
Shelter Shelter is a small building giving temporary protection from bad weather or danger. Shelter may also refer to: Places * Port Shelter, Hong Kong * Shelter Bay (disambiguation), various locations * Shelter Cove (disambiguation), various locatio ...
,
Des Wilson Des Wilson (born 5 March 1941) is a New Zealand-born British campaigner, political activist, businessman, sports administrator, author and poker player. He was one of the founders of the British homelessness charity Shelter and was for a while an ...
to get lead-free petrol into the United Kingdom. Wilson ran the public campaign and co-opted Dr Robin Russell-Jones as the unpaid medical and scientific advisor. In April 1983, the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution (RCEP) published a report that confirmed the dangers of lead to children's health, and recommended that lead should not be added to petrol. Within half an hour of the RCEP report being published, the Environment Secretary, Tom King, announced that the government would support the introduction of unleaded petrol, that oil companies would have to provide it on forecourts, and that car manufacturers would have to make engines that could use it. Shortly after, Wilson resigned from CLEAR to become Chairman of
Friends of the Earth Friends of the Earth International (FoEI) is an international network of environmental organizations in 73 countries. The organization was founded in 1969 in San Francisco by David Brower, Donald Aitken and Gary Soucie after Brower's split with ...
. From 1984-89 Russell-Jones became Chair of CLEAR whom he represented on the Government committee, Working Party on Lead in Petrol (WOPLIP). Having achieved its objectives, CLEAR was officially closed down in 1989. Due to the campaign's significance, the
Wellcome Library The Wellcome Library is founded on the collection formed by Sir Henry Wellcome (1853–1936), whose personal wealth allowed him to create one of the most ambitious collections of the 20th century. Henry Wellcome's interest was the history of med ...
, one of the world's major resources for the study of medical history, holds a collection of CLEAR's archives. CLEAR is regarded as a textbook example of how to run and win an environmental campaign. Although the services of an experienced and charismatic campaigner (Wilson) was crucial to the success of CLEAR, it would never have achieved its goals without a solid scientific base. Ultimately it depended upon a junior hospital doctor (Russell-Jones) and a respected scientist (Robert Stephens) with sufficient confidence in their own judgement to risk their professional reputations in pursuit of a cause. When CLEAR was launched, the blood lead level regarded as safe by the medical profession in the UK was 35 microgrammes per decilitre of blood. In 1991, the level deemed safe by the US
Centre for Disease Control The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is the national public health agency of the United States. It is a United States federal agency, under the Department of Health and Human Services, and is headquartered in Atlanta, Georgi ...
(CDC) was lowered to 10, but CDC now accept that there is no safe threshold and define a level above 5 as a cause for concern.


Background

Tetraethyl lead Tetraethyllead (commonly styled tetraethyl lead), abbreviated TEL, is an organolead compound with the formula Pb( C2H5)4. It is a fuel additive, first being mixed with gasoline beginning in the 1920s as a patented octane rating booster that all ...
was first added to gasoline in the 1920s as an “anti-knock” agent, which is a cheap method of boosting the octane rating. It is not possible to use catalytic converters with leaded fuel as the lead coats the platinum and renders the catalyst ineffective. Lead free gasoline was therefore introduced into Japan in the late sixties, and into the US in the mid seventies in order to enable the use of catalytic converters and thus mitigate photochemical pollution. However, by 1979, in the face of growing evidence of the harmful effects of lead on children's behaviour, neuro-cognitive development and IQ, the Department of Health and Social Security (DHSS) commissioned a report under the Chairmanship of Professor Lawther. The subsequent report, Lead and Health recommended that the lead content of petrol should be reduced from 0.4 to 0.15g/L, but there was no recommendation to introduce lead-free petrol. Nor was there any recommendation to lower the lead level deemed safe from 35 microgrammes per decilitre of blood. In 1980 the Conservation Society Pollution Working Party published a response to the Lawther report “Lead or Health” co-authored by Professor
Derek Bryce-Smith Derek Bryce-Smith (1926–2011) was a chemist and professor of Organic Chemistry at the University of Reading from 1956 until his retirement in 1991. His work included organometallic chemistry, radical chemistry, photochemistry, environmental scie ...
PhD, DSc, C Chem, FRSC, Professor of Organic Chemistry at Reading University, and Dr Robert Stephens, PhD, DSc, C Chem, FRSC, Reader in Organic Chemistry at the University of Birmingham, but HMG resisted their call for unleaded petrol under pressure from both the motor manufacturers and the petroleum industry.


Objectives

The first edition of CLEAR's newspaper listed the campaign's objectives: *To urge that the fixed limit of 0.15 grams per litre for lead in petrol should be introduced earlier than the official date of 1985 and be for existing cars only. *To demand that as soon as possible, and in any event by 1985, all new cars sold in the UK market be required to run on lead-free petrol. *To demand that as soon as possible, and in any event by early 1985, all petrol stations be required to have lead-free petrol available for sale to the public. *To urge that taxation on the sale of petrol should be imposed to create a price advantage to motorists purchasing lead-free petrol. *To maintain surveillance on the use of lead generally and to encourage enforcement of measures necessary to reduce lead pollution wherever it occurs.


International conference

In 1982 the CLEAR Charitable Trust organized an international conference on the biological effects of low-level lead exposure, and the subsequent proceedings, Lead versus Health, were co-edited by Russell-Jones and
Michael Rutter Sir Michael Llewellyn Rutter CBE FRS FRCP FRCPsych FMedSci (15 August 1933 – 23 October 2021) was the first person to be appointed professor of child psychiatry in the United Kingdom. He has been described as the "father of child psychol ...
FRS, Professor of Child Psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry. A key chapter (8), “The contribution of lead in petrol to human lead intake” was co-authored by Russell-Jones and Dr Bob Stephens, and concluded that lead in petrol was contributing at least 70% to the lead intake of a 2-year-old child in Western society. This contrasted with the Government's figure of 10 per cent as outlined in the Lawther Report which had ignored the contamination of above-ground crops by airborne lead. Other key chapters were provided by
Herbert Needleman Herbert Leroy Needleman (December 13, 1927 – July 18, 2017) researched the neurodevelopmental damage caused by lead poisoning. He was a pediatrician, child psychiatrist, researcher and professor at the University of Pittsburgh, an elected me ...
from Harvard University (Chapter 12) and
Clair Patterson Clair Cameron Patterson (June 2, 1922 – December 5, 1995) was an American geochemist. Born in Mitchellville, Iowa, Patterson graduated from Grinnell College. He later received his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago and spent his entire profe ...
from the California Institute of Technology (Chapter 2). In 1979, Professor Needleman had published a seminal paper in the
New England Journal of Medicine ''The New England Journal of Medicine'' (''NEJM'') is a weekly medical journal published by the Massachusetts Medical Society. It is among the most prestigious peer-reviewed medical journals as well as the oldest continuously published one. Hist ...
that demonstrated dose-dependent relationships between elevated levels of lead in shed milk teeth and a host of negative outcomes in children, including distractibility, hyperactivity lower IQ and a tendency to get easily frustrated. Clair Patterson had built an ultra-clean laboratory in the early fifties in order to measure the minuscule quantities of lead isotopes in an iron meteorite from the birth of the solar system; by which means he was able to date the age of the Earth at 4.55 billion years, an estimate that has never been superseded. Using his ultraclean facility, Patterson was able to demonstrate that natural levels of lead in prehistoric and pristine samples were orders of magnitude lower than official estimates, most of which were measuring lead contamination. His key contribution was his “measles diagram” demonstrating that if the lead burden of a pre-technological human was represented by one dot, and a patient with clinical lead poisoning was represented by 2000 dots, then the lead burden of a typical adult living in Western society was represented by 500 dots. For no other toxin was there such a narrow gap between what is known to be typical and what is known to be toxic. However, the reason that the conference created headlines was because Professor Rutter, who had sat on the Lawther Committee, changed his mind about the causality of lead, and its association with lower IQ in children.


References

{{reflist Environmental organisations based in the United Kingdom 1981 establishments in the United Kingdom Lead poisoning Environmental organizations established in 1981 Air pollution in the United Kingdom